EISENBERG: This next game is called Fruity Films. I'm warning you know, in which Jonathan Coulton will tell you about in a minute. But first, keeping with the Merriam-Webster definition of fruity is something strange or crazy, with one strange or crazy fact about you that you would like everyone to know, Tony?

TONY FORDE: I mean I grew up on Long Island, so at one point I was...

EISENBERG: There you go.

(LAUGHTER)

FORDE: As you do, I was in an EMO band at the same time I was in Model U.N., ladies.

(LAUGHTER)

FORDE: It was a wonderful pickup line, as you might guess.

EISENBERG: What was the name of your Emo band?

FORDE: Odds Against and two of them are actually here.

EISENBERG: Oh nice.

(APPLAUSE)

FORDE: We were terrible. We were terrible.

EISENBERG: Odds Against, then super Emo. Odds Against us. Ester, how about you?

EMILY SKREZEC: Well, I've been writing this book at a contemporary retelling of "The Canterbury Tales."

EISENBERG: Yeah.

ESTER BLOOM: And what in - retelling in what sense?

Retelling as in Chaucer is a 40-year-old lady who takes a train trip across the country and everyone she meets is actually a character from "The Canterbury Tales," but re-imagined, so half of them are gay or their multicultural or whatever and they all tell her stories that impact what she decides to then do with her life.

EISENBERG: Nice.

BLOOM: All right.

(APPLAUSE)

EISENBERG: How about you, Jonathan? How about one strange, crazy fact about you for our listeners?

JONATHAN COULTON: A weird fact about me is that I am writing the exact same book that Ester is.